Nitrogen requirement of cereals: 1. Response curves

Abstract
Summary: Examples of response surfaces for pairs of nutrients and results of 41 multi-level experiments with N only were used to compare the goodness-of-fit of polynomial, inverse polynomial, exponential and intersecting-straight-lines models.Whereas no one model fitted best at every site, many results were well represented by two intersecting straight lines and on average, this model had the least residual mean square. Of 17 experiments with spring barley in south western England the few results best represented by smooth curves were from crops much affected by leaf diseases.Fertilizer response was poorly represented by models without a falling asymptote, like the simple exponential and inverse linear. Study of residuals after fitting the quadratic showed that this widely used model consistently over-estimated both the amount of fertilizer needed for maximum yield and the yield loss when too much fertilizer was given.When fitted to the mean yields of each nitrogen treatment, most models had residual mean squares equal to or less than the error mean square, repeating a result obtained at Rothamsted as early as 1927. We question the validity of some well-known evidence for block and treatment additivity.For 12 experiments in 1970, between-site differences in the parameter values of the two straight lines representing grain yield were related to leaf area at ear emergence.

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